Car show for York County boy battling cancer | WPMT FOX43

Authorities Arrest 3 in Connection With Vehicle Break-In Ring By: TWC News Staff TWC News: Onslow Co. Authorities Arrest 3 in Connection With Vehicle Break-In Ring Play now Time Warner Cable video customers: Sign in with your TWC ID to access our video clips. install Adobe Flash 9 or above. Install now . Then come back here and refresh the page. ONSLOW COUNTY, N.C. Onslow County authorities arrested three people they said could be responsible for more than 60 vehicle break-ins between January and July 2014. Calvin Roman, Jamel Brown and Manuel Mejia were charged for their involvement in what the Onslow County Sheriff’s Office calls a major vehicle break-in ring. Police are still seeking another suspect, Nicholas Anthony Perrault. Police said the men told them the suspects broke into cars to fund their heroin addictions. For the original version including any supplementary images or video, visit http://charlotte.twcnews.com/content/news/coastal/709728/onslow-co–authorities-arrest-3-in-connection-with-vehicle-break-in-ring/

In Hanover, the Xtreme Addictions Car Club got together with family and friends of 4-year-old Ayden Murray for a car show at Hickory Falls Family Entertainment Center. The event Cars For Ayden showcased all types of vehicles, from fast cars to even remote-controlled models. More than 500 people attended, all to help Ayden. He doesnt let it phase him. He just.. no matter what, hes always just wanting to play and run around even if hes hooked up to machines he will get out of bed. It doesnt bother him. He will have his sick days but its like it doesnt matter, said Mariah Jemison, who organized the event. A ll proceeds from the event will go to Ayden and his family. For the original version including any supplementary images or video, visit http://fox43.com/2014/07/13/car-show-for-york-county-boy-battling-cancer/

He went to a community college in Ohio for two semesters, but he didnt have a focus and it didnt lead to a job.

In 1978, when he was 27, his mother moved to Orlando and he headed south with her. He was still restless and bounced from job to job, usually because he quit. He said it was mostly menial labor, and the best job was in a warehouse.

I had potential, but I was too busy goofing off, he said.

One of his Florida cousins was a preacher, and he said that relative convinced him to practice a type of Christianity that he now feels was cult-like and close-minded. The religion forbade alcohol, and he said mostly out of fear he quit drinking from 1985 to 2002.

I felt like an outsider all the time, Davis said. I was trying to please my cousin. I was a dry drunk. I never felt comfortable in my own skin. I wasnt drinking because I couldnt.

In 2002, he decided to come to Daytona Beach to work a temporary job at Daytona International Speedway over the July 4 weekend. He had always loved NASCAR, and thought hed be cleaning up in the garage and meeting drivers.

It turned out he cleaned up in the parking lot, and when the races ended and the drivers went home, he had no plan of what to do next. He didnt want to go back to Orlando, and he wound up living on the streets for the first time.

At first, I was scared to death, he said.

But then he befriended a few other homeless people and figured out how to survive.

Homelessness is a culture, and after you bore into it, it doesnt seem so bad, he said.